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The ACC Championship Game is an annual American college football game held in early December by the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) each year to determine its football champion. From its inception in 2005 to 2019, and from 2021 to 2022, the game pit the champion of the Coastal Division against the champion of the Atlantic Division in a game ...
The 2008 ACC Championship Game was held in Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, on December 6, 2008. Virginia Tech won by a score of 30–12, becoming the first ACC team to win consecutive ACC championship games. [22] Tampa also hosted the 2009 ACC Championship Game which was won by Georgia Tech over Clemson. [23]
The title ACC Championship Game may refer to several sporting events that are sponsored by the Atlantic Coast Conference. The ACC Championship Game crowns the champion of the ACC football season. The championship game, or tournament final, of the ACC men's basketball tournament crowns the winner of the basketball season.
ACC championship game SMU vs. Clemson The Mustangs finished with the best record in the ACC in their inaugural season in the league, winning each of their eight conference games.
The ACC football champion was determined based on regular season finish from 1953 until 2004. In 2005, the conference split into two divisions, and the division winners met in the ACC Championship Game through the 2022 season. [12] The football divisions were eliminated in 2020 and after the 2022 season.
McGuire had molded the Gamecocks into elite status by 1971, achieving national prominence, an undefeated regular-season ACC championship in 1970, and a first-ever ACC tournament championship in 1971.
Clutching it like it was an ACC championship trophy. No one expected N.C. State to be the ACC champion in 1987. North Carolina was undefeated in the league and ranked No. 2 in the country.
In 2019–2020, with the launch of the ACC Network, the men's schedule expanded to 20 games and the women's schedule expanded to 18 games. The ACC and the Big Ten Conference have held the ACC–Big Ten Challenge each season since 1999. The competition is a series of regular-season games pitting ACC and Big Ten teams against each other.